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This is a fully functional babe lair
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Akron, OH
Posts: 2,324
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Quote:
What I am saying is that though he is compensated very well for his work, and there are undoubtedly some in this country who would like to see executives like him not make as much as they do just because of the principle of wage disparity, he is compensated in a manner that is proportional to his value to the company as a whole. His responsibilities and decisions weigh heavily on the direction and success of the entire company. He has acquired specific skills and experience over the years working his way up the corporate ladder that make him the right tool for the requirements of his job. It would be extremely unfair to him to cut his salary just to diminish wage disparity. Of course a company should reward its employees generously, including everyone at the bottom. But I find fault in allowing that mindset to blind a person to the fact that many executives actually deserve high pay. Not all of course, there are many that will bleed a company dry for their own personal benefit and toss its employees around with no regard for their income needs. But not every executive is like that, and I object to any sweeping assertion that every executive in corporate America should have an artificial wage cap. My father may make almost 6 times what the average worker in the plant does, but he again earns every penny of it. To artificially deny him that fair compensation, dictated by the head of the company, is greed in the opposite direction. Greed by those who think his work is just making powerpoint presentations and playing golf all day. Greed by those who assume an executive's job is among the easiest professions in the world, and because of that executives owe everyone below them a piece of their salary pie. I assure you, there are highly paid executives of some companies that deserve the pay they are rewarded. The company my father works for is doing very well through this economic crisis, and they see no reason that it would not continue to do so for the foreseeable future. He is an instrumental part of keeping this healthy company afloat and moving amid the economic wreckage littering the corporate landscape in America. One may look at the fact that he makes 6 times the average plant worker (15 times what I made there as a summer intern a few years back) and shout "capitalist pig!", but the company is healthy and growing while others are in decline or failing completely because of the smart strategy and decision making by those at the top of the company. My parents are both children of divorced households, alcoholic parents, and very poor socio-economic environments. One grew up in the ghetto of San Diego, running around barefoot eating only plain white toast for breakfast everyday and a single egg for lunch for years. The other grew up with the weight of being among the poorest kids at school, 12 years old walking home from swim practice alone at night while dad is drunk in a bar downtown and who eventually wrote him out of his will because he didn't want to keep working at the failing family radiator repair shop in the desert. My parents know what it is like to work dead-end jobs and have worked their way up the ladder of prosperity through determination so they could provide a better environment for their children than they had growing up. And they succeeded. I say all this because my father is a real person, my parents are real people, and he is not some evil corporate menace that feeds off the backs of the poor and the uneducated. My parents give generously to charity because they believe in helping other people through tough times, because they know exactly what it is like; they experienced it at the worst possible time in life. Anyone who says that my father's salary is unfair, he should have his pay capped and the difference spread thinly amongst the general employees can straight go to hell in my book. He is a man if integrity and does not "hoard his wealth from the masses". He gives and gives because he was once on the receiving end of that kind of giving. Painting all executives with this biased brush of "they make 6 times as much as the factory worker so they must just be greedy pigs, lets take their income and give it to everyone else" is not only incredibly cold and selfish, but it is also a misguided and over correctional attempt for a perceived wrongdoing represented by the executives' high salaries. I'll say it again once more: many executives, especially of healthy companies, do much more work that the average American does not see. And it is this hard work, these weighty decisions, this forward thinking and progressive mindset towards growth for the entire company, that grants many (not all) executives salaries, though they are large, that are actually proportional to the work done and the value of the results of said work obtained by the company from the efforts of those executives. Ok I'm done now.
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Kiss my white Irish ass. |
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